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Steam rises from the cooling towers at a coal-fired power station.
Steam rises from the cooling towers at a coal-fired power station. Photograph: John Giles/PA
Steam rises from the cooling towers at a coal-fired power station. Photograph: John Giles/PA

Top UK fund manager divests from fossil fuels

This article is more than 6 years old

Archbishop of Canterbury plays crucial role in BMO Global Asset Management’s decision to dump £20m of shares in firms such as BHP Billiton

One of Britain’s biggest managers of ethical funds is to dump £20m of shares in fossil fuel companies in one of the biggest divestments so far because of climate change.

Shares in BHP Billiton, the Anglo-Australian mining giant, will be among those sold by BMO Global Asset Management’s range of “responsible” funds, which manage £1.5bn of assets. They were previously known as the “stewardship” funds, the first ethical funds launched in Britain.

The archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, played a crucial role in the divestment, as president of BMO’s responsible investment council. The Church of England has already pulled out of investing in companies that make more than 10% of its revenues from thermal coal or oil from tar sands.

BMO’s divestment goes further, banning all companies with fossil fuel reserves from being in its responsible funds range.

It is estimated that the world can afford to burn between one-fifth and one-third of proven reserves before there is a reasonable chance of tipping the planet over the 2C danger threshold of warming. This has prompted campaigners to demand pension and investment funds sell shares in oil and coal companies.

BMO director Vicki Bakhshi said: “If all current known reserves are extracted and burnt, we know that the world would not meet the 2 degrees temperature limit established under the Paris Agreement. As such, we have come to the view that investment in companies with fossil fuel reserves is increasingly incompatible with the ethical and sustainability objectives of the responsible strategies range that we run.”

Bakhshi said BMO would use its voice to encourage companies and policymakers to adopt strategies to make a transition to a low-carbon global economy.

BMO’s divestment comes amid widening concerns by big financial institutions about holding shares in greenhouse gas-intensive sectors.

More than $5tn in institutional assets, such as pension funds, now have some sort of divestment strategy in place and one-third of UK investors say they would like a fossil-free option for their savings.

More on this story

More on this story

  • National Trust resists pressure to ditch Barclays over environmental concerns

  • Loss of fossil fuel assets would not impoverish general public, study finds

  • C of E divests of fossil fuels as oil and gas firms ditch climate pledges

  • Climate campaigners sue BNP Paribas over fossil fuel finance

  • UK students pledge ‘career boycott’ of insurers over fossil fuels

  • Bank group accused of exploiting loopholes and ‘greenwashing’ in climate pledge

  • Concern over Church of England pension board fossil fuel industry links

  • One of world’s biggest pension funds to stop investing in fossil fuels

  • Lib Dems propose ban on new listings of fossil fuel companies on LSE

  • BlackRock holds $85bn in coal despite pledge to sell fossil fuel shares

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